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فهرست مطالب نویسنده:

saba afifi

  • Saba Afifi, Amir Hossein Alizadeh Bahmani, Leila Zarei, Motahareh Mahi-Birjand, Mehdi Hoorang, Marziyeh Zare, Iman Karimzadeh, Farzad Peiravian, Mahtabalsadat Mirjalili, Payam Peymani*
    Objective

    Despite growing debates about the health systems’ nonmedical performance, there has not been any empirical research on nonmedical performance and patients’ rights consideration as a driver of human rights in the pharmaceutical sector. This study’s main objective was to assess the nonmedical performance of community pharmacies of Shiraz, Iran.

    Methods

    A cross-sectional study was conducted using two self-administrated Likert-based questionnaires based on the World Health Organization (WHO) responsiveness framework and the legal charter communicated by the Ministry of Health and Medical Education of Iran. The population was patients older than 18 years who took a prescription from community pharmacies located in Shiraz and willing to answer the questions voluntarily, from 2018 to 2019. Considering the weights of subdimensions of responsiveness provided by the WHO framework, the total score of responsiveness was calculated ranging from 0 to 100.

    Findings

    The response rate was 80.5%. The mean (standard deviation) overall score of responsiveness was 57.18 (21.61), with a median of 56.71. The mean score of client orientation was lower in respondents with a high education level than those with a diploma and under diploma (P = 0.028).

    Conclusion

    Nonmedical pharmacy performance was considered either medium or high in more than half of the cases based on the participants’ views. Regarding client, orientation was seen less often in patients with high education level compared to those with a lower education level.

    Keywords: : Community pharmacies, Iran, nonmedical performance, WorldHealth Organization responsiveness framework
  • Marziyeh Zare, Saba Afifi, Amir Hossein Alizadeh Bahmani, Iman Karimzadeh, Mohammad Salehi-Marzijarani, Leila Zarei, Behnam Honarvar, Sulmaz Ghahremani, Kamran B Lankarani, Ali Mohammad Sabzghabaee, Payam Peymani*
    Objective

    The purpose of this study was to document the demographic data, to assess the proportion of consumed medicines and the amounts and types of drugs available to households, and to to estimate the probable prevalence of certain diseases in the southern region of Iran.

    Methods

    In this cross-sectional population-based study carried out in Shiraz (the central city in the Southern part of Iran), we documented and evaluated the drug usage details in a random sample of 1000 households during 2018–2020. We analyzed the usage of drug categories based on the anatomical therapeutic chemical classification, which the World Health Organization recommends.

    Findings

    In the studied population, the average age (± standard deviation) was 45.54 ± 15.82, ranged 18–91 years. More than 90% had medical insurance coverage. About 81.8% of the participants had individual family medicine practitioners, and most of them (93.8%) received medications with a physician’s prescription. The most frequently used medications were cough and cold preparations (12.9%), nervous system drugs (12.6%), and cardiovascular system drugs (11.6%).

    Conclusion

    Despite the easy access to medications for most participants, few individuals (about 6%) received their medications without a prescription. The most frequently prescribed medicines were the common cold, acetaminophen, and metformin. Common cold, gastrointestinal (GI) disorder, and diabetes were the most commonly used medication classes. Furthermore, we have found a probably higher than average prevalence of cardiovascular, GI, and endocrine disorders. This information could be used by the local policymakers as a basis for the estimation and allotment of health-care resources.

    Keywords: Medication usage pattern, population‑based study, pharmacoepidemiology
  • Amir Hossein Alizadeh Bahmani, Mehdi Hoorang, Sheida Hosseini, Mehrnoosh Eskandari, Kiana Shayestehfard, Mahyar Shekoohi, Nazafarin Hatami-Mazinani, Saba Afifi, Ali Mohammad Sabzghabaee, Payam Peymani*

    Coronavirus 19 (COVID-19) is an extremely transmittable microbial infection that has emerged in Wuhan (China) in late 2019, leading to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 syndrome, and caused a pandemic all over the globe. This study is a systematic review of all 927 clinical trial studies performed worldwide from the beginning of the COVID-19 mysterious pandemic in China. These researches have registered in different databases. According to the best of our knowledge, China (74.82%), the United States (4.49%), and France (2.72%) have the most significant number of clinical trials, respectively. Clinical trials can be randomized or nonrandomized. Due to our results, 32.58% of studies were randomized, and 7.12% were not randomized. Most of the studies were open‑labeled studies (22.44%), and double‑blinded (4.42%) and quadruple blinded (2.48%) studies stand in second and third place regarding the number of trials, respectively. The direction and quantity of clinical trials attempted to identify a possible cure for COVID-19 demonstrates the depth of this crisis. As we are writing this article, a significant international endeavor will find a cure or vaccine for containing this devastating and mysterious disease.

    Keywords: 2019‑novel coronavirus, clinical trials, outcome, review, severe acuterespiratory syndrome‑coronavirus 2
  • Marziyeh Zare, Saba Afifi, Iman Karimzadeh, Mohammad Salehi Marzijarani, Leila Zarei, Gholamreza Ghazipour, Mahtabalsadat Mirjalili, Kamran B. Lankarani, Ali Mohammad Sabzghabaee, Fariba Ahmadizar, Payam Peymani
    Objective

    Patients’ complain regarding pharmaceutical services at community pharmacies is a fundamental issue as it can directly affect people’s service utilization. For the first time in Iran, this survey aimed to investigate the experience of people regarding declare a complaint against the pharmacy sectors as a community-based study.

    Methods

    In this cross-sectional study, over 100 samples based on postal codes were randomly selected from the city of Shiraz in 2017– 2018. The data collection instrument was designed in two parts (demographic and social profile which record the complaint experiences against pharmacists, pharmacy services, etc.). The data were analyzed by SPSS.

    Findings

    All 1035 eligible participants had a mean age of 45.54 ± 15.82 years (ranged from 14 to 91). Nearly 70% of the participants were female. Around 81.8% had a family physician coverage, whereas 7.4% of them had no medical insurance coverage. The frequency of complaints from the pharmacies was 35.6%. Nearly 55% of the complaints were related to governmental pharmacies. Homemakers were 1.36 times more likely to have experienced complaints in comparison with their employed female counterparts. Health status had an inverse association with complaints. Those participants who had received prescription medication were about two times more likely to have filed a complaint in comparison with those who received medication without a prescription. In addition, females aged 40–59 and above 60 and unemployed participants were more satisfied with respect to complaint follow-up process.

    Conclusion

    Low level of satisfaction with respect to the complaint process is a concerning issue; hence, strategies are warranted to improve the quality of services provided in the pharmacies.

    Keywords: Community pharmacy, complaint, patient, pharmaceutical service, population‑based study
  • Marziyeh Zare, Saba Afifi, Iman Karimzadeh, Mohammad Salehi Marzijarani, Leila Zarei, Kamran Bagheri Lankarani, Alimohammad Sabzghabaee, Mahtabalsadat Mirjalili, Fariba Ahmadizar, Payam Peymani *
    Background

     Iran has welcomed a large population of immigrants and refugees, which has led to new demands and priorities in many aspects of life, such as healthcare services.

    Objectives

     For the first time in Southern Iran, in Shiraz City, population-based research was conducted on the patterns of medication use in native non-Iranian residents.

    Methods

     The present cross-sectional study was conducted amongst Shiraz citizens from 2017 to 2018. The population consisted of 43 migrants. Data were collected using a multipart data form. All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS.

    Results

     A total of 43 Afghan migrants were included in the study. Most of them were female (72.1%), aged under 40 years (67.4%), and homemaker (62.8%) with an education level of non-completed high school diploma (97.7%). The majority of the subjects did not have insurance or family physician coverage (93%), and 85.7% got medications without prescription. The three most common medications used by the subjects were iron supplements, acetaminophen, and cold medicines.

    Conclusions

     Iran is now hosting Afghan nationals as one of the largest population of refugees in the world. The health conditions of the Afghan population need more attention in order to improve the health status of their community in Iran.

    Keywords: Resident, Immigrant Population, Settled Refugees, Minority
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